Hey OP, how did the installation went?
Hey OP, how did the installation went?
That’s the technical explanation for the changes, no an explanation for closing the discussion all together.
@bitwarden bitwarden locked and limited conversation to collaborators
They also locked the thread 16 hours ago (as of writing this comment), with no explanation.
Yes, but both Intel and AMD offer an equivalent (not as mature, though). AMD is FSR and Intel is XeSS
Maybe the duck was the friends we made along the way
A very useful tip for technical images (i.e., lab report/research): export whatever graph you created as .svg, and do some prettifying touches in InkScape. It is faaaar easier than doing it in code.
Also, always export the .svg, even if you’re not gonna use it. You never know when you want to do a very small correction, and it will save you quite some time.
Your comment seems off, has some references to QGIS (props to QGIS! It made my thesis way better)
I think Jellifyn does. You can also set up watch partys. Navidrome is lighter and more responsive tho.
You can sell it in the second hand market and save the money. Stonks
Jupyter is great for data analysis.
Silly, but I like those because I can eat bits of it after using them :3
I changed the icon location, and my muscle memory still was trying to open them from the previous location, basically in a complete auto-pilot mode. That led me to a realization of how fucked up the situation was, and eventually helped me uninstall/reduce screen time of those apps.
Same here, and I’ve enjoyed it more than my Debian experience.
I’m curious: Is it a bad idea to have iptables
with a default DENY rule? I use a deafult DENY in ufw
, and it uses iptables
under the hood.
Apocalypse Now. Damn, what a movie.
Great movie. If you haven’t, you should check out Arrival (2016).
From Linux, I’ve screen-shared my desktop in the web application for some years without troubles. Not even need to install the app.
Being a number nerd, I can see the appeal for something like this (extremely bad quality of data aside), or at least I do frequently visit OpenBenchmarkin.org (similar concept than UserBenchmark, but open source).
I also know 1 person who is obsseded with constantly buying/selling parts for their PC, and for whatever reason still uses UB after I told them how shit it is.
My guess is that this will also resonate with some Intel fanboys.
All of this is more of an exception to the rule, but they need just a few bunch of people subscribing to generate more profit than before.
I’m really glad to hear that! Happy Linuxing :)